Hi all your works are great. Creating a language is a habit for me. I think it is also a habit for you. I want to see your language in a long sentence. I want you to translate the following into your language and if it is possible I want you to help me pronounce it. OK?Here is the sentence:My friend told me that she were in love with me. I couldn't believe him. But I have to find the truth.

On, and just saying, you don't capitalize in IPA transcripts. But I guess that's arbitrary.

Well actually my friend is male and the one who is in love with me in female, also I can't believe my male friend.

About the capitalization, I didn't know that we were not supposed to do that. Thanks for telling me. And also Thanks for translating. But I didn't understand the meaning. Like "love ear hear" and "eye see".

1) What is the difference between o and å?2) What is the difference between ö and ø?3) Why use ñ when nj would do perfectly well?

Answer for questions 1 and 2:There are no differences between o and å, and also ö and ø when pronouncing them. But it is just for now. I think o will be /ɔ/ and å will remain /o/. The same for ö and ø. But we can't double o and ö. Like "loonen" is wrong. The correct is "låånen".

Answer for question 3:It is a grammatical rule. Nasalization. If a word ends with "n" and a suffix which begins with a vowel comes, the "n" changes to "ñ". Like Låånen + en = lååneñen (my honor). And also if a word ends with 2 vowels and a suffix which begins with a vowel comes to it, we add "ñ" between them. Because in Vi Söllidäävin 3 vowels can't be side by side. E.g. l'ai + ñ + uo = l'aiñuo (sighs[plural]).

In most sentences personal pronouns are not used: a combination of verb declension and context is usually sufficient to understand who we're talking about . But in this example I had to use them to denote the difference between the two speakers (odu: 3sig-NOM + male, he; oda, 3sig-NOM + female, she).

Native: DutchFluent: English, FrenchLearning: Swedish (when I have the time and the energy)Creating: Arain

There are 2 ways of speaking in Caiisa (my conlang): the first is "propper" and the second is "normal" and is used when the subject is already know.

There are also 2 different ways of writing Caiisa as the propper script requires a lot of extra strokes and shifting between keyboards. Here the second (in red) is the same as the first (in blue) but with accentless spelling using just a normal English keyboard.